The UK's Decision to Extradite
Assange Shows Why The US/UK's Freedom Lectures
Are a Farce
June
17, 2022:
Information Clearing House
--The
Assange persecution is the greatest threat to
Western press freedoms in years. It is also a
shining monument to the fraud of American and
British self-depictions.
By Glenn Greenwald
The
eleven-year persecution of Julian Assange
was extended and escalated on
Friday morning. The British
Home Secretary, Priti Patel, approved the U.S.'s
extradition request to send Julian Assange to
Virginia to stand trial on eighteen felony
charges under the 1917 Espionage Act and other
statutes in connection with the 2010 publication
by WikiLeaks of thousands of documents
showing widespread corruption, deceit, and war
crimes by American and British authorities
along with their close dictatorial allies in the
Middle East.
This decision is unsurprising — it has been
obvious for years that the U.S. and UK are
determined to destroy Assange as punishment for
his journalism exposing their crimes — yet it
nonetheless further highlights the utter sham of
American and British sermons about freedom,
democracy and a free press. Those performative
self-glorifying spectacles are constantly
deployed to justify these two countries’
interference in and attacks on other nations,
and to allow their citizens to feel a sense of
superiority about the nature of their
governments. After all, if the U.S. and UK stand
for freedom and against tyranny, who could
possibly oppose their wars and interventions in
the name of advancing such lofty goals and noble
values?
Having reported on the Assange case for
years, on countless occasions I've laid out the
detailed background that led Assange and the
U.S. to this point. There is thus no need to
recount all of that again; those interested can
read the granular trajectory of this persecution
here or
here. Suffice to say, Assange — without
having been convicted of any crime other than
bail jumping, for which he long ago
served out his fifty-week sentence — has
been in effective imprisonment for more than
a decade.
In 2012, Ecuador granted Assange legal asylum
from political persecution. It did so after the
Swedish government refused to pledge that it
would not exploit the WikiLeaks founder's travel
to Sweden to answer sex assault accusations as a
pretext to turn him over to the U.S. Fearing
what of course ended up happening — that the
U.S. was determined to do everything possible to
drag Assange back to U.S. soil despite his not
being a U.S. citizen and never having spent more
than a few days on U.S. soil, and intending to
pressure their long-time-submissive Swedish
allies to turn him over once he was on Swedish
soil — the government of Ecuadorian President
Rafael Correa concluded Assange's core civic
rights were being denied and thus gave him
refuge in the tiny Ecuadorian Embassy in London:
the
classic reason political asylum exists.
When Trump officials led by CIA Director Mike
Pompeo bullied Correa's meek successor,
ex-President Lenin Moreno, to withdraw that
asylum in 2019, the London Police entered the
embassy, arrested Assange, and put him in the
high-security Belmarsh prison (which the BBC in
2004
dubbed “the British Guantanamo”), where he
has remained ever since.
After the lowest-level British court in early
2021
rejected the U.S. extradition request on the
ground that Assange's physical and mental health
could not endure the U.S. prison system, Assange
has
lost every subsequent appeal. Last year, he
was permitted to marry his long-time girlfriend,
the British human rights lawyer Stella Morris
Assange, who is also the mother of their two
young children. An extremely unusual unanimity
among press freedom and civil liberties groups
was formed in early 2021 to
urge the Biden administration to cease its
prosecution of Assange, but Biden officials —
despite spending the Trump years masquerading as
press freedom advocates — ignored them (an
interview conducted last week with Stella
Assange by my husband, the Brazilian Congressman
David Miranda, on Brazil's Press Freedom Day,
regarding the latest developments and toll this
has taken on the Assange family, can be seen
here).
The Home Secretary's decision this morning —
characteristically subservient and obedient of
the British when it comes to the demands of the
U.S. — does not mean that Assange's presence on
U.S. soil is imminent. Under British law,
Assange has the right to pursue a series of
appeals contesting the Home Secretary's
decision, and will likely do so. Given that the
British judiciary has more or less announced in
advance their determination to follow the orders
of their American masters, it is difficult to
see how these further proceedings will have any
effect other than to delay the inevitable.
But putting oneself in Assange's position, it
is easy to see why he is so eager to avoid
extradition to the U.S. for as long as possible.
The Espionage Act of 1917 is a
nasty and repressive piece of legislation.
It was designed by Woodrow Wilson and his band
of authoritarian progressives to criminalize
dissent against Wilson's decision to involve the
U.S. in World War I. It was used primarily to
imprison anti-war leftists such as Eugene Debs,
as well as anti-war religious leaders such as
Joseph Franklin Rutherford for the crime of
publishing a book condemning Wilson's foreign
policy.
One of the most insidious despotic
innovations of the Obama administration was to
repurpose and revitalize the Wilson-era
Espionage Act as an all-purpose weapon to punish
whistleblowers who denounced Obama's policies.
The Obama Justice Department under Attorney
General Eric Holder
prosecuted more whistleblowers under the
Espionage Act of 1917
than all previous administrations combined
— in fact, three times as many as all prior
presidents combined. One whistleblower charged
by Obama officials under that law is NSA
whistleblower Edward Snowden, who in 2013
revealed mass domestic spying of precisely the
kind that Obama's Director of National
Intelligence James Clapper (now of CNN)
falsely denied conducting when testifying to
the Senate, which led to
legislative curbs enacted by the U.S.
Congress, and which courts have ruled
unconstitutional and illegal.
What makes this law so insidious is that, by
design, it is almost impossible for the
government to lose. As I detailed in
a
Washington Post
op-ed when the indictment was first revealed
— arguing why it poses the greatest threat to
press freedoms in the West in years — this 1917
law is written as a “strict liability” statute,
meaning that the defendant is not only guilty as
soon as there is proof that they disclosed
classified information without authorization,
but
they are also barred from raising a
"justification” defense — meaning they
cannot argue to the jury of their peers that it
was not only permissible but morally necessary
to disclose that information because of the
serious wrongdoing and criminality it revealed
on the part of the nation's most powerful
political officials. That 1917 law, in other
words, is written to offer only show trials but
not fair trials. No person in their right mind
would willingly submit to prosecution and life
imprisonment in the harshest American
penitentiaries under an indictment brought under
this fundamentally corrupted law.
Whatever else one might think of Assange,
there is simply no question that he is one of
the most consequential, pioneering, and
accomplished journalists of his time. One could
easily make the case that he occupies the top
spot by himself. And that, of course, is
precisely why he is in prison: because, just
like free speech, “free press” guarantees in the
U.S. and UK exist only on a piece of parchment
and in theory. Citizens are free to do
“journalism" as long as it does not disturb or
anger or impede real power centers. Employees of
The Washington Post and CNN are “free”
to say what they want as long as what they are
saying is approved and directed by the CIA or
the content of their “reporting” advances the
interests of the Pentagon's sprawling war
machine.
Real journalists often face threats of
prosecution, imprisonment or
even murder, and sometimes
even mean tweets. Much of the American
corporate media class has ignored Assange’s
persecution or even cheered it precisely because
he shames them, serving as a vivid mirror to
show them what real journalism is and how they
are completely bereft of it. And the American
and British governments have successfully
exploited the petty jealousies and insecurities
of their failed, vapid and pointless media
servants to get away with imposing the single
greatest threat to press freedom in the West
without much protest at all.
Free speech and press freedoms do not exist
in reality in the U.S. or the UK. They are
merely rhetorical instruments to propagandize
their domestic population and justify and
ennoble the various wars and other forms of
subversion they constantly wage in other
countries in the name of upholding values they
themselves do not support. The Julian Assange
persecution is a great personal tragedy, a
political travesty and a grave danger to basic
civic freedoms. But it is also a bright and
enduring monument to the fraud and deceit that
lies at the heart of these two governments'
depictions of who and what they are.
https://greenwald.substack.com/p/the-uks-decision-to-extradite-assange
The views expressed in this article are
solely those of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the opinions of Information Clearing House.
Reader financed- No
Advertising - No Government Grants -
No Algorithm - This
Is Independent
Registration is not necessary to post comments.
We ask only that you do not use obscene or offensive
language. Please be respectful of others.
|